ē Mario Williams said he doesnít care what we think about his performance. Truthfully, there hasnít been a performance to care about. Letís call it now ó this guy is soft, and the Bills have apparently whiffed to the tune of $100 million. He was invisible yet again. He said in the locker room he needs to get better. You know what, he was supposed to already be better when he got here. He was supposed to be one of the best in the league. Heís not, and the team he left, Houston, is now 6-1 without him.

This is where we mention that defensive end Mario Williams, Nixís $100-million investment thatís looking like Facebook stock, was nowhere to be found in terms of rushing the quarterback, the job he was hired to do in crunch-time situations like this.

Williams finished with two tackles and as many zeros across the rest of his stat line as there are on his paychecks. A guy named Kyle Moore had a better game with a half sack and two QB hits.
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As for Stupor Mario, Iím wondering if Nix and his personnel men did enough vetting of the manís personality and resume to decide he was worth the price of 20 players. He gets single blocked most all of the time and taking a leadership role doesnít seem to be in his nature.

ďI donít care about your expectations,íí he said to the media gathered near his locker stall. ďI donít care about anybodyís expectations.íí

Wow, Mario. Maybe it would please you to know that our expectations of you and the Bills have changed a lot in seven weeks. They have returned to the place they have been for a decade: low.